Band of historians: Ensemble dives into Big Easy鈥檚 complex musical past

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Add history to the 青青草视频 Wind Ensemble鈥檚 repertoire.

The University鈥檚 concert band will explore New Orleans鈥 complicated musical heritage when it performs next month as part of symposium marking the Crescent City鈥檚 300th birthday.

The group will interpret 鈥淐ongo Square鈥 and 鈥淪toryville.鈥 The pieces recreate two spaces 鈥 one public, the other more intimate 鈥 that influenced the development of one of the city鈥檚 greatest exports, its music. 

James Syler, a music instructor at the University of Texas at San Antonio, composed both. Neither has been performed in New Orleans before, said Dr. William J. Hochkeppel, UL Lafayette director of bands, who conducts the wind ensemble.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no place where they deserve to be played more. We are telling history with music,鈥 Hochkeppel said.

The performance begins at 1 p.m. on Sunday, March 11, the fourth and final day of 鈥淢aking New Orleans Home: A Tricentennial Symposium.鈥 The Historic New Orleans Collection and the City of New Orleans鈥 2018 Commission are the symposium鈥檚 co-sponsors. [].

The wind ensemble concert will take place at the University of New Orleans鈥 University Center, 2000 Lakeshore Drive.

Commentaries by Syler and author Freddi Williams Evans will accompany the ensemble鈥檚 performance. The University of Louisiana Press published Evans鈥 鈥淐ongo Square: African Roots in New Orleans鈥 in 2011, and her companion book for children, 鈥淐ome Sunday,鈥 last year.

In 1718, Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville, chose to establish a new settlement at a 鈥渇ine crescent鈥 of the Mississippi River. Bienville, then commandant general and governor of the French colony of La Louisiane, named the site for the Duc d鈥橭rl茅ans.

The following year, Bienville鈥檚 government brought the first enslaved Africans to Louisiana. In 1724, the colonial government instituted the Code Noir. The Black Code restricted the activities of slaves, but also designated Sundays as a day of rest.

Slaves used Sundays to gather throughout the city until an 1817 ordinance confined their assemblies to one public space: Congo Square, a five-acre tract at the upper edge of the French Quarter.

The square became a site of cultural preservation over which hung the specter of slavery, Evans wrote in her 2011 book鈥檚 introduction.

鈥淚n Congo Square on Sunday afternoons, African descendants spoke and sang in their native languages, practiced their religious beliefs, danced according to their traditions, and played African-derived rhythmic patterns on instruments modeled after African prototypes,鈥 Evans wrote.

Those rhythms became knitted in the city鈥檚 musical fabric, and Congo Square was 鈥済round zero for African culture in New Orleans,鈥 Evans concluded.

Storyville was a similarly complex, and musically influential, setting. Officials established the legalized red-light district in 1897 to contain 鈥 and ostensibly control 鈥 prostitution within a 13-block section of the city.

Its brothels, saloons and barrelhouses employed musicians Jelly Roll Morton, "Bunk" Johnson, 鈥淜ing鈥 Oliver and Louis Armstrong, among others.

Syler said Storyville 鈥減roduced one of the great ironies in the history of American music 鈥 that out of a pit of human despair, violence and abuse, this place would foster the music and musicians who would have a fundamental influence in the formation of early jazz, a joyful, energetic and hopeful music.鈥

Syler wrote 鈥淪toryville鈥 in 1996. He produced 鈥淐ongo Square鈥 in 2014. UL Lafayette was one of 12 universities nationwide that commissioned the latter piece.

Hochkeppel conducted the wind ensemble when it first performed 鈥淐ongo Square鈥 during a campus concert in 2015.

Syler鈥檚 compositions 鈥渉ave atmosphere,鈥 Hochkeppel said. 鈥淵ou know how sometimes you can feel the fog? I feel like I can touch this music.鈥

鈥淐ongo Square鈥 overlaps African drums, Creole melodies and early jazz riffs. 鈥淪toryville鈥 similarly combines the types of music a person might have heard while visiting there 鈥 jazz, ragtime and blues.

At one point, Syler introduces a hymn into the melody, a reminder, Hochkeppel said, that underneath Storyville鈥檚 fa莽ade of pleasure 鈥渨as desperation and sadness, as well as joy.鈥

鈥淏oth 鈥楥ongo Square鈥 and 鈥楽toryville鈥 have social questions imbedded in them. It makes people think. It makes people feel. It鈥檚 serious music, but there鈥檚 a message there.鈥 

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Photo caption: Members of the UL Lafayette Wind Ensemble during a 2017 performance in Angelle Hall鈥檚 Ducrest-Gilfry Auditorium. (Photo credit: Danny Izzo / Nouveau Photeau)